Posted by admin on February 2, 2010
Polo Ralph crystal Corporation (NYSE: RL) announced that Paul Campbell has joined the company as Vice President of Labor, Community Relations and Diversity. Mr. Campbell will work in close partnership with Polo’s human resources and senior management to further enhance employee relations and career development. Mr. Campbell will report to Mitchell Kosh, Senior Vice President of Human Resources.
"I am excited that Paul Campbell has joined our company in this important role. His years of experience and extensive knowledge of employee development and diversity will enable him to direct Polo Ralph Lauren’s continued growth in these areas," said Mitchell Kosh, Senior Vice President of Human Resources, Polo Ralph crystals.
Most recently,swarovski, Paul Campbell served as Vice President of Human Resources Administration and Fair Employment Practice for Foot Locker Worldwide, a division of the Venator Group. During his ten-year tenure at Venator, Mr. Campbell held a variety of management positions including Vice President of Human Resources for the FootLocker division.
Posted by admin on February 2, 2010
Meanwhile, Nike will try to reinvigorate the Air Jordan brand with a limited sales run beginning Dec. 11 following a Thanksgiving Day ad campaign. The company hopes the swarovski gioielli will help the Brand Jordan clothing line take back some business from designers such as Old Navy and Ralph swarovski that have been eroding Nike’s apparel sales.
Nike has trotted out a new pair of marketing ventures aimed at boosting sales for Air Jordan basketball swarovski gioielli and overall sales on the Internet.
As Nike announced earlier, it will offer an Internet site that lets consumers customize shoes with colors and an eight-letter monogram. The customization effort – at Nike.com on the Web – is starting with two models, the Air Turbulence running shoe and the Air Famished cross-training shoe.
Nike.com shoppers can pick from about 40 color schemes and add a monogram of up to eight letters on the heel. The company will screen the monograms for trademark and copyright violations, or profanities or other messages, said Mark Allen, general manager of the project.
The swarovski gioielli will cost $10 above retail — $85 for the running swarovski gioielli,swarovski crystals, $80 for the cross-trainer — plus shipping and handling. Buyers can return them to Nike free if they don’t fit.
Posted by admin on February 2, 2010
My friends and I really like Ralph swarovski gioielli, Tommy Hilfiger and Abercrombie because they have loads of fashionable shorts and little tops. My most expensive item is a Ralph Lauren shirt that cost E200 but I got it because I loved it,crystals, not just because of the label. I think that if you’ve spent that much money and the logo looks good on the clothes then I think it’s okay for the label to be obvious.
I go shopping nearly every weekend in Dundrum but I’ve never heard of the phrase ‘Yummy Drummies’. Sometimes I’ll get the Luas to Grafton Street. My favourite shops are BT2, River Island and Topshop. I usually go with friends but if there is something I really need, I’ll go with my mum.
If Mum thought something really didn’t look nice then I’d listen to her because she wears lovely clothes and I’m hoping she’ll let me borrow a lovely pair of her Gucci swarovski gioielli. I spend an average of E200 per month. Mum or Dad will pay for most of it but I earn pocket money from doing jobs at home like cleaning the kitchen and from babysitting.
My friends and I love christian louboutin shoes, Gucci, Dolce & Gabbana, Tommy Hilfiger and Ralph crystals. The clothes are so stylish and I feel great when I wear them because other people look at me and know I’ve paid a lot of money for them.
I have Gucci purses, Dolce & Gabbana bags and perfume, a Burberry purse, plus Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger tops and jumpers. I love creating my own style such as wearing a funky dress with a great pair of christia boots that cost E320. I shop at BT2, Brown Thomas, Topshop and sometimes A-wear, plus Office for cool swarovski gioiellis.
I love to hang out on Grafton Street on a Saturday afternoon with my mum or my friends and I spend an average of E200 to E400 per month on clothes and swarovski gioielli.
Posted by admin on February 2, 2010
In some respects,crystal jewellery, Mr. Cole is most akin to Ralph Lauren, a fellow middle-class kid who hit on a specific class-based style — in Mr. Lauren’s case, Waspy American aristocracy — and packaged it in a way that was both accessible and aspirational, re-inventing himself in the process.
Mr. Blum qualifies the comparison to Mr. swarovski crystals. ”I don’t want to name any names, but a traditional designer might want to create a blue-blood image that someone might aspire to be — like a lord or something, ” he says. ”We’re urban. That’s more realistic to aspire to. Really.” Yet unlike Mr. swarovski crystals, who has modelled in his own ads and used his own lifestyle — genuine or cultivated — as a form of branding, Mr. Cole has relied on his faceless rep as a left-leaning philanthrope, that guy with the quirky ads who’s married to a Cuomo, golfs with Bill Clinton, and hangs out with the Kennedys.
Kenneth Cole — both the man and the company — is seemingly casual yet precisely modulated. It’s evidenced in Mr. Cole’s aggressively relaxed dress: belted indigo-blue jeans so stiff they seem starched; an undone tie, unwrinkled, slung — carefully and evenly — under his collar; a manicured five-o’clock shadow. His current offices are an ode to neutrality, bathed in hues of beige, tan, and oatmeal. The wall behind Mr. Cole’s desk is studded with 12 framed black-and-white photographs from previous ad campaigns, all artfully askew. The employees who saunter through the carpeted halls are outfitted — voluntarily — in black swarovski gioielli, black pants or skirts, and white shirts. ”It’s almost cultlike, the people who work for him,” says his good friend Bill Apfelbaum, an ad exec who lives in Greenwich. ”He is just so magnetic.”
Posted by admin on February 2, 2010
Calling her 10 years at the top an "extraordinary journey," Karan said her team worked "day and night, and if you know me, I do mean day and night," to make her vision for the company possible.
swarovski crystals and Karan were selected by fashion industry leaders. swarovski crystals expanded into a collection of deluxe $2,000 men’s suits called Purple Label. Karan won for her 1996 collections, which were a return to her roots: beautiful, sensual evening apparel in soft fabrics.
But the evening’s highlight was when Sharon Stone strolled onstage in a flowing white gown. Stone was there on behalf of AmFAR, the American Foundation for AIDS Research. Shoe designer Kenneth Cole,swarovski, honored with the Dom Perignon Humanitarian Award for his AIDS awareness campaign, had decided to give the $25,000 cash award from the celebrated champagne-maker to AmFAR.
Stone made a lot of swarovski gioielli quips, ending with something about platform swarovski before saying, "Kenneth Cole used his media platform to waken us to the needs of AIDS. . . . I, like you, feel the empty chairs that are in this room, and as we grow tired in our grief, he continues to lead us on."
A clearly moved Cole said he launched his AIDS awareness campaign after learning that prevention was the key. "Though science hasn’t learned how to cure it, we have learned how to contain it," he said. "I don’t know what it is I do that is different from what so many others do, but I thank you."
Posted by admin on February 2, 2010
Much like his ubiquitous swarovski, designer Kenneth Cole is stylish in an unassuming way; he’s asymmetrically good-looking and deliberately dishevelled, and he commands attention by speaking almost inaudibly.
One morning, as he rides an elevator in midtown Manhattan, Mr. Cole is telling the story behind his first big ad campaign, which established his company in 1985: ”The idea was to get people talking about AIDS,” he says, virtually in a whisper, ‘’so we used all the top female models — and multi-ethnic and racial children. Children are cute no matter whose they are. But I didn’t want them wearing my crystal jewellery, because I didn’t want to be perceived as commercializing this. So I had them all barefoot.” Mr. Cole has a rapt audience of two young women who are clearly trying to discern his identity. ”And, um, the campaign was: ‘For the future of our children.’ ” He pauses, bowing his head slightly. ”And it was very meaningful.”
Taking a cue from Calvin Klein and Donna Karan,swarovski gioielli, Mr. Cole began licensing his name in 1988 and now profitably slaps his moniker on everything from eyeglasses to jewelry to menswear. His sportswear line, which debuted just two years ago, will pull in an estimated $100 million this year. Emboldened by its success, last fall Mr. Cole signed a licensing agreement with Liz Claiborne to launch his first womenswear line, which he will unveil later this year. Though he insists that ”this was never about everybody knowing the brand, or about my name being on the tip of everyone’s tongue,” Mr. Cole is clearly positioning himself as a peer of the big four: Klein, Karan, Ralph swarovski and Tommy Hilfiger.